Boho Caves

The Boho Caves (pronounced /b/ BOH,[1] from Irish: Botha, meaning "huts")[2] are a collection of caves centred on the village of Boho, County Fermanagh on the northern slopes of Belmore Mountain. They encompass the main Boho Cave and the smaller Waterfall Cave and Upper and Lower Ravine Caves. The Boho Cave system is the sixth-longest cave system in Northern Ireland,[3] is designated an Area of Special Scientific Interest (ASSI #144)[4] and is the only example of joint-controlled caves in Northern Ireland.[5]

Boho Caves
Quarry entrance in flood; resurgence is further downstream in drier conditions
LocationIrish Grid: H1268 4431
Boho, Co. Fermanagh
Coordinates54.3468°N 7.8019°W / 54.3468; -7.8019
Length2.5 km (1.6 mi)
GeologyLimestone
Entrances7+
List of
entrances
Main Sink,
Quarry,
Field Shakeholes
HazardsHigh flood risk: extremely active in wet weather
AccessOwned by Fermanagh District Council

Geology and hydrology

The rock strata at Boho Caves date from the Asbian substage of the Carboniferous period, estimated to be around 325 million years old. The rock sequence exposed at Boho consists of the Glencar Limestone Formation which is overlain by the Dartry Limestone Formation, composed of cherty limestones and limestones and shales of the Carn Limestone Member. The Dartry Limestone is, in turn, overlain by the Meenymore Formation and the Glenade Sandstone.[5][6] The caves are formed within the Dartry Limestone. The main cave contains typical karst features such as stalactites, stalagmites, cave curtains and flowstone.

The water flowing through the Boho Caves originates from Aghanaglack River.[7] After dry weather, the river sinks in the streambed well upstream of the caves and does not emerge until far downstream past the ravine. In wetter conditions, water flows into the cave system via several routes including the Main Sink entrance, which can sump and overflow into the nearby field shakeholes. It then exits the cave at the usual downstream resurgences, as well as the Upper and Lower Ravine caves (via bedding planes from the northern end of Boho Cave) and in particularly high floods, the Quarry entrance (see picture).[8]

History of exploration

The caves at Boho have been known locally for hundreds of years, and are mentioned on Ordnance Survey Ireland's 6-inch survey of Ireland, conducted between 1829 and 1841.[9] By 1870 it was quite the norm for tourists to arrange a guided tour with a local resident, as William Wakeman described in his guide book of that year.[10]

Although Édouard-Alfred Martel and Lyster Jameson definitely visited Boho parish in 1895 and investigated some of the caves, Martel's description makes it unclear as to whether he visited Boho Caves or nearby Pollnagollum Coolarkan.[5][11] It is however clear that Jameson visited both caves himself, before Martel's arrival in the area and with the assistance of Rev. A. Knight, and reported on the fauna he discovered in the caves.[12]

Boho quarry, in which there are a number of entrances to the cave, was active until the mid-1950s and many local people would have explored short sections of the cave during and before this time. The Yorkshire Ramblers explored Boho Caves in 1907 but it was not until the mid-1960s that a survey of this complicated system was attempted by Dublin cavers.[5][13] The system was extensively resurveyed by the Reyfad Group in the 1980s.[8]

Access

Boho is a cave much used by guided educational parties studying the local environment and by casual visitors, but exploration should never be undertaken lightly. In wet weather the narrow passages flood quickly and at these times the cave is extremely dangerous and should be avoided.[5] Heavy flood pulses have been known to inundate the cave up to 24 hours after heavy rain has ceased, and the entire system is known to flood to the roof in under an hour.[8]

It is also recommended that the Upper Ravine area downstream of Boho quarry should not be visited under any circumstances because of roosting bats.[14]

Fauna

Schaefferia emucronata

The main biospeleological interest in the Boho area is the population of approximately 50 Daubenton's or Water Bats (Myotis daubentonii) which roost in the Upper Ravine Cave.[5] These were recorded as early as 1895 by Lyster Jameson (as Vespertilio daubentonii) and specimens were sent to the then Science and Art Museum in Dublin.[12] On this visit, Jameson and his guide, Rev. A. Knight, also identified two large spiders, Meta menardi and Meta merianae, and three additional invertebrates that were likely washed in by floods: the water bug Velia currens and two flies belonging to the genera Erioptera and Molophilus.

Lass of the University of Nottingham (in Hazelton, 1974) made extensive faunal collections in Boho Caves which included the identification of the troglobitic Springtail (Schaefferia emucronata).[5] Phil Chapman cites the collection of a stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) from Boho and the Field Shake Holes and Southern Series have been observed to support a large spider population (Meta menardi).[15] The strong draughts may bring trogloxenes into the cave on which this population thrives.[5] The record of the water beetle, Agabus biguttatus, was of some interest at the time of the caves' declaration as an ASSI in 1985, as there had been no other modern Irish records of this cave-dwelling species up to this point.[4]

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See also

References

  1. Boho Heritage Organisation (2009). Edel Bannon; Louise Mclaughlin; Cecilia Flanagan (eds.). Boho Heritage: A treasure trove of history and lore. Mallusk, Northern Ireland: Nicholson & Bass. p. 246. ISBN 978-0-9560607-0-9.
  2. "Botha/Boho | Placenames Database of Ireland". logainm.ie. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  3. "N Ireland – Longest caves". UK Caves. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  4. "Declaration of Area of Special Scientific Interest at Boho, County Fermanagh. Article 24 of the Nature Conservation and Amenity Lands (Northern Ireland) Order 1985" (PDF). Northern Ireland Environment Agency. 1985. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  5. "Belmore, Ballintempo & Tullybrack Uplands; Boho". Earth Science Conservation Review. Habitas. Retrieved 5 May 2009.
  6. Legg, I. C.; Johnston, T. P.; Mitchell, W. I.; Smith, R. A. (1998). "Geology of the country around Derrygonnelly and Marble Arch". Memoir of the Geological Survey of Northern Ireland (Sheets 44, 56 and 43 [Northern Ireland]).
  7. "Boho; Boho Caves Sink". Earth Science Conservation Review. Retrieved 17 March 2009.
  8. Jones, Gareth Ll.; Burns, Gaby; Fogg, Tim; Kelly, John (1997). The Caves of Fermanagh and Cavan (2nd Ed.). Lough Nilly Press. ISBN 0-9531602-0-3.
  9. 6-inch Black & White (Map). Ordnance Survey Ireland. 1829–1841. Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  10. Wakeman, W. F. (1870). Lough Erne, Enniskillen, Belleek, Ballyshannon, and Bundoran: with Routes from Dublin to Enniskillen and Bundoran, by Rail or Steamboat. Dublin: John Mullany. pp. 125–126.
  11. Martel, E.-A. (1897). Irlande et cavernes anglaises. Paris: Delagrave.
  12. Jameson, H. Lyster (1896). "On the exploration of the caves of Enniskillen and Mitchelstown for the R.I.A. Flora and Fauna Committee". The Irish Naturalist. 5: 93–100. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  13. Brodrick, Harold (1908). "Some Caves And Pot-Holes In County Fermanagh". Yorkshire Ramblers' Club Journal. Leeds: Yorkshire Ramblers' Club. 2 (8): 291–305. Retrieved 1 January 2014.
  14. "Cave access and cave restrictions". Speleological Union of Ireland (SUI). Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  15. Chapman, Phil (1993). Caves and cave life New Naturalist No. 79. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 9780002199087.

Further reading

  • Jones, Gareth Ll.; Burns, Gaby; Fogg, Tim; Kelly, John (1997). The Caves of Fermanagh and Cavan (2nd Ed.). Lough Nilly Press. ISBN 0-9531602-0-3.
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